Experience Tumblr Like Never Before
Lake Eibsee, Jannik Obenhoff šš
Almost died after taking this picture, but it was worth it
Gutenberg Castle and church in Balzers, Liechtenstein.
I look at the thunderstorm and clouds, being at the top of the tower and immersed in my own thoughts
I've been really sad these past few weeks, I didn't feel like drawing much, but recently I found some new songs I really liked, and inspired me to draw this.
I've always really liked cold landscapes, places that seem forgotten, ruins reclaimed by nature, or places far from civilization.
Maybe I'll do a series of drawings with this theme, a good excuse to try to draw more landscapes and draw more the human version of my fursona.
Commission time! This one was for @/ravenheart316 on insta :V
by Mackeson on Flickr.Making Sense of the Abyss, view from Machu Picchu, Peru.
Example of a mid-sized mountain style light wood floor and brown floor enclosed dining room design with beige walls and no fireplace
[Alt description: Three pictures of mountains and moon with a night sky. Together, the words on the three pictures form the short poem "What is it like? / Having a whole sky that is your favorite color?"]
I can't "nope" this enough.
Iām just fan of the nature. The way sun sets and leaves the golden colour to grade with the blue sky. The fog and the mountains. In love with this nature.
Jabal Ḥafeeṫ is a mountain located primarily in the environs of Al Ain, which itself is in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi in the UAE. Part of the mountain straddles the border with Oman, while the summit is located wholly within United Arab Emirates. #UAE #JebelHafeet #Mountain #SMC #5dmarkiii #Canon #Oman #Traveling #AlAin #AbuDhabi #UnitedArabEmirates #Photography #FilmedBySMC
Suspended in space, the stars that reside in the Orion Nebula are scattered throughout a dramatic dust-and-gas landscape of plateaus, mountains, and valleys that are reminiscent of the Grand Canyon. This visualization uses visible and infrared views, combining images from the Hubble Space Telescope and the Spitzer Space Telescope to create a three-dimensional visualization.
Learn more about Hubbleās celebration of Nebula November and see new nebula images, here.
You can also keep up with Hubble on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and Flickr!
Visualization credits: NASA, ESA, and F. Summers, G. Bacon, Z. Levay, J. DePasquale, L. Hustak, L. Frattare, M. Robberto, M. Gennaro (STScI), R. Hurt (Caltech/IPAC), M. Kornmesser (ESA); Acknowledgement: A. Fujii, R. Gendler
Each year since 2009, geophysicist and pilot Chris Larsen has led two sets of flights to monitor Alaskaās mountain glaciers. From the air, scientists like Larsen collect critical information on how the regionās snow and ice is changing. They also are in a good position to snap photographs of the stunning landscape. Larsen was flying with NASA science writer Maria-Jose ViƱas on board. During a flight on August 19, 2018, ViƱas shot this photograph during a mission to survey Yakutat Icefield and nearby glaciers in southeast Alaska.
The beach and stream in the photograph are in Russel Fjord near the terminus of the Hubbard Glacier. While this photograph does not show any glaciers, evidence of their presence is all around. Meltwater winds down a vegetation-free path of glacial till. On its way toward open water, the stream cuts through a beach strewn with icebergs. āThe Hubbard Glacier has a broad and active calving front providing a generous supply of icebergs,ā said Larsen, a researcher at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks. āThey are present all summer since new ones keep coming from the glacier.ā
NASAās Operation IceBridge makes lengthy flights each year over the landmasses of Greenland and Antarctica and their surrounding sea ice. While IceBridge-Alaska flights are shorter in length, the terrain is equally majestic and its snow and ice important to monitor. Wherever IceBridge flights are made, data collection depends in part on weather and instruments.
Read more: https://go.nasa.gov/2Mj48r0
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com. Ā
Let ourĀ Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter take you there!
Our lunar orbiter, also known as LRO, has been collecting data on lunar topography, temperature, resources, solar radiation, and geology since it launched nine years ago. Our latest collection of this data is now in 4K resolution. This updated "Tour of the Moon" takes you on a virtual tour of our nearest neighbor in space, with new science updates from the vastly expanded data trove.
First stop, Orientale Basin located on the rim of the western nearside. It's about the size of Texas and is the best-preserved impact structure on the Moon. Topography data from LRO combined with gravity measurements from our twin GRAIL spacecraft reveal the structure below the surface and help us understand the geologic consequences of large impacts.
Unlike Earth, the Moon's axis is barely tilted relative to the Sun. This means that there are craters at the poles where the sunlight never reaches, called permanently shadowed regions. As a result, the Moon's South Pole has some of the coldest measured places in the solar system. How cold? -410 degrees F.
Because these craters are so cold and dark, water that happens to find its way into them never has the opportunity to evaporate. Several of the instruments on LRO have found evidence of water ice, which you can see in the highlighted spots in this visualization.
South Pole-Aitken Basin is the Moon's largest, deepest and oldest observed impact structure. Its diameter is about 2,200 km or 1,367 miles across and takes up 1/4 of the Moon! If there was a flat, straight road and you were driving 60 mph, it would take you about 22 hours to drive across. And the basin is so deep that nearly two Mount Everests stacked on each other would fit from the bottom of the basin to the rim. South-Pole Aitken Basin is a top choice for a landing site on the far side of the Moon.
Now let's go to the near side. Tycho Crater is 100 million years young. Yes, that's young in geologic time. The central peak of the impact crater likely formed from material that rebounded back up after being compressed in the impact, almost like a spring. Check out that boulder on top. It looks small in this image, but it could fill a baseball stadium.
Also prominent on the nearside is the Aristarchus Plateau. It features a crater so bright that you could see it with your naked eye from Earth! The Aristarchus Plateau is particularly interesting to our scientists because it reveals much of the Moon's volcanic history. The region is covered in rocks from volcanic eruptions and the large river-like structure is actually a channel made from a long-ago lava flow.
As much as we study the Moon looking for sites to visit, we also look back at places we've already been. This is because the new data that LRO is gathering helps us reinterpret the geology of familiar places, giving scientists a better understanding of the sequence of events in early lunar history.
Here, we descend to the Apollo 17 landing site in the Taurus-Littrow valley, which is deeper than the Grand Canyon. The LRO camera is even able to capture a view of the bottom half of the Apollo 17 Lunar Lander, which still sits on the surface, as well as the rover vehicle. These images help preserve our accomplishment of human exploration on the Moon's surface.
Finally, we reach the North Pole. Like the South Pole, there are areas that are in permanent shadow and others that bask in nearly perpetual light. LRO scientists have taken detailed brightness and terrain measurements of the North Pole in order to model these areas of sunlight and shadow through time. Ā Sunlit peaks and crater rims here may be ideal locations for generating solar power for future expeditions to the Moon.
LRO was designed as a one-year mission. Now in its ninth year, the spacecraft and the data emphasize the power of long-term data collection. Thanks to its many orbits around the Moon, we have been able to expand on lunar science from the Apollo missions while paving the way for future lunar exploration. And as the mission continues toĀ gather data, it will provide us with many more opportunities to take a tour of our Moon.Ā
And HERE's the full āTour of the Moonā video:
We hope you enjoyed the tour. If you'd like to explore the moon further, please visit moon.nasa.gov and moontrek.jpl.nasa.gov.
Make sure to follow @NASAMoonĀ on TwitterĀ for the latest lunar updates and photos.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com